TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classi- fied ad taker, for quick results. aiunortue an second Clan Ian Dun anrnaat. Ottawa Ur READY ‘FOR. LAuNctiiNo A grapefruit-sized earth aatel- tDec. 4». The shpere has six an- llte rests on its mount at the top of the third stage of the Vanguard fired at Cape (‘anaveral.. Fla.. Wednesday rocket scheduled to Causeway Proiect Part Of Broad Maritime Plan OTTAWA (Special) —- 1‘rans- not known if high quality rock question of tolls on the proposed tennas and two radio transmitters capable of sending signals tracking stations on the ground hundreds of miles away. Rectan- port ‘Vttnister George Hoes toldlfor fill can be found in sufficient the Guardian Thursday that study l quantities close to the prospective of the feasibility of a causeway approach of the causeway along linking Prince Edward Island to the New Brunswick Coastline. the mainland is part of a much ‘ broader study going tire problem of the aritimea. pletcd .\li‘ Indonesia Says Thousands Of Dutch Must Get Out .l\K\RTA. Indonesia (Art —Imct:-ting on the repatriation qucs- intcr-island traffic plus fr pa 1., .- .0,‘ Th Sd tion between officials of the jus- ocean business. and two tra ng “’.‘.?.‘.1.‘..i..§'.““Z.’l’"‘.....i.i...."iiufi tire ministry and the Dutch .Er.-=- ~c°mi>=nte=- tr-owns. mom- lands of Dutch citizens otit of b353y- The Dutch ‘°r°'3" "‘““" Van den “'3' "mu urn‘ this island republic. It asked The "7" 3' The H33“ “id 915"‘ "E .\t~:liei-lands government to close "“'"g made l” "°"""'° D“"'h “" one of its eight ('on-‘“"" a‘ but l‘1tll(‘l. 0|! tr naporta It is like important recommendations will .left to the futun-. When he was in question of possible I-‘.'l)(‘l'L‘l‘ when this study is cpm- Prince Edward Island by his whether tolls department dealing with the b tlon in . in tires said that to date it lslmad \ cabinet decree also ordered lflfllrt‘ by the government of al llll‘ big Dutch business conccrns faint over in the last few days iv ttimniunist - dominated labor lit‘. in- \ll 1 hcse actions. a phase of» the anti Dutch campaign aimed at itinning primitive West I-:.ini-a. were hedged by con ii- dtrtoiis and confusion. The llutch until 1949 ruled the W00 East Indies islands linovvn as Indonesia. They have a billion-dollar business em- ’ c 46 000 nor in the republic. Iliitt h subjects live here lV\t)lllll‘(lS are Eurasi servit- IN "(lt'(l .\'kti‘lt'tl The govern laborers ‘ans es ment to remain. "“‘l- ""1 Will DUI I10 0bSl8Flf'S in tot the crashed automobiles. 1 New now still . though’ Rgbbgry Plans -l‘l~lIC(' Minister Gustaaf .\tai'i-, _\|()NTREAl. ice» .. A two-car ?.‘i\t'illl said Indonesia intends if (-“tn,-,(,n l"""b'° (0 "P817181? 8” ll” 46-’lfoilcd a robbery attempt. 0”" W os are not’ want! ‘i and searched nearby buildings for‘ be their vvay if they want to go. \early 300 former employees when he saw four men run from of the banned KLM Royal Dutch the scene of the crash. One mall now no employed ‘arrested carried a sawed-off shot Airlines who hi‘ the Indonesian Garuda Atr- gun. the other a loaded “M will not be asked to leave. he said MEET WITH DUTCH . Claims iti;...iii;;.;g.i;;. Report Belonging To Gov’t. Minister H ‘VTTAWA ICP) — Agricultun arkneee Thursday ac- cused Jean lieeage vrat norlherll unit-'. “Inns in his rrnmcnt. former Lib minister of northern affairs. mlnister.of poeaeeelon a “'"“h belongs to the federal gov- '’'"mary. and not have “W H w tie left mice la «lune follow the IIIMI in his hands after he left office." tenuucd to net: I copy of th- VII’ Asked if he has any opinions on N would be charged if project and w en te is com- pleted. Mr. Hees id this is ly that something which wi have tobe onth. the Minister said. II e no public statement (ll th als as necessary. 'l‘lic Dutch government asked the International Red Cross and ‘the International Rcfugce Organi- ization to help in the repatriation. l()"e offit-ial in The Hague said lrcports received there indicated the Dutch in Indonesia are reach- ‘mg a state of panic. The government take - over of lDutch buslnesscs was ordered at tier members of Sobsi. the Com- .ITIllnl'~‘il - dominated trade union ‘fctlcration. scizcd l(l".\i. shipping time which handles 70 per cent of t ‘Collision Foils 'l‘hui'sd.'iy apparently Police arrested two armed men ltvv-o others who escaped from one’ I A passcrby sounded the alarm pistol. A police officer said he had recognized one of the men as be ing wanted for armed robbery. Squad cars and 40 policemen h llarkness said Mr Mr. - port when Lesage received ll! ‘"3 There was a "grave 1109811011 II to whether he should have re- tained possession." The new minister said that be- fore be returned the reP0l1 00“ to him Thursday by Mr. he would have to discuss the met- ter with his cabinet collenl“¢|- He considered the report th- porperty of the government and said "it should never have been Mr. Iiesage said he felt he was report because it was "a docil- ment which would lulllfy DC‘-I0‘ I took." He did not elaborate. For a time after the new 80'' teal office June 11. Hr- Harkneu was minister of north- ern affairs before taltinl OW-‘Y ll“ ‘present to. ttrflfll .htnlstar of northern aflain. N‘ '1.‘ , was Owl! T52 laatb gular objects on the surface of the transmitters. causeway nor did his department issue any press release on subject. "When I was last on the Is- land." he said.“ I talked pri- vately with many people intercu- ed in the causeway and heard their views on many aspects of it. It is more titan likely that the tolls was rought up but I can't recall say- ingaboutthemonewayortb ether.“ Dutch business in Indonesia. ' ets ran up red flags over the buildings Tuesday and Wed- HAUL DOWN FLAGS The Communist chiefs appar- ently bowed to more > moderate government leaders. who ordered the firms handed back to their owners. e Red ags were hauled down. the reached agreement New York today over in Beirut. Lebanon Newfoundland. was Wtttic @iti1wtJfi[i®1iITtt “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CIlARLO’I"I‘ETOWN CANADA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1957 Indications Canada Plans A-Power For Destroyers Nine Rescued One Injured In Factory Fire TORONTO tCPt—Nine persons were rescued and at least one in- jured Thursday night when ex- plosion and fire destroyed a sub- urban Scarborough factory. First reports from the scene were that a number of persona were trapped the basement of the thermos bottle company plant and a lar e m ' Hospital said only one victim had been admitted. A police car reported all per- sons in the building rescued. Cause of the blast known. Witnesses said thousan s of bottles exploded and flames 5 ‘=9. OTTAWA <L‘Pi -- l)cfc-ncc Min-I 5h°l 30 lee‘ “"0 [he 3”" The °"fistcr G. R. Pcarkes confirmed! plosion was reported to burst a watermain, flooding surrounding area. u. K. Tdries Retain Seat LlVl::ltP0()l.. England (Reu- tcrst — The (,0nsei'vative party retained a parliamentary seat. but with a vastly reduced major- ity. in a byelection Thursday. The Conservative candidate for e Conservative majority was 11.969 in a straight fight against These weapons. a Labor opponent. Hcimmarskiold Continues Big Mid-East Job DAMASCUS, Syria tAPt——Dag Hammarskjoid, fresh from set- tling an Israeli - Jordan dispute. with Syria h u r s d a y on reinforcing the United Nations truce supervision organization aimed at easing ten- sion on the Syrian-Israeli iron- 1- .- O '1 The agreement with Syria was announced a four - hour meeting between I-Iammar- skjold and officials headed by Foreign Minister Salah Bltar. ter estine truce observation organiza- tion and of the mixed armisti commission for application of the tlce agreement" of 1949. No details of steps to reinforce organization‘: wo were disclosed. There has been series of shootings along the § is a Syrian-Israeli border and each sid has accused the other of res. w a s smiling and optimistic on his arrival in amascus. “The nature of my mission re- nesday set up lines . _ ,. . around three of me bilge“ quires no comment. he said. banks Large-scale withdrawals but mm d°°5 mt me“ I ‘m ' . ‘ pessimistic." or demms began‘ He said he planned to leave for with a stop- __s__*_______ OLD SETTLEMENT rvland nca; St. John's. founded in 15 Persons Die Snow In U. S. NEW YORK (AP! — One of the worst pre-winter storms on record moved out to sea Thursday. leav- ing thC middle Atlantic states to dig out from under as much as two feet of snow. Fifteen persons died in New York. New Jersey and Maryland. most of them from heart attacks brought on by shovelling snow or battling traffic jams. A bright sun aided emergency crews digging free such hard-hit cities as New York. Newark. Philadcl p b i a and Washington. New York had 8.700 men toiling to clear its streets. ' Snowfall records for the date were shattered in some areas dur- ing the 25 hours that the storm raged lf ' and ended Wednesday night. New York's 7.3 inches eclip a Dec. 1 record of CV: inches set in lilll. Newark bad a record 13.: i n c h e 1. Philadelphia got six inches downtown and I0 inches in its suburbs. Sections of Virginia had 14 inches and northern Maryland re- ported two feet of snow. It was the earliest major snmr storm to hit the area since 1953. Temperatures wen lfl “'9 NI during the night in most of the affected area. which extended from Vlrginfatoconnecticut. Strong winds with gusts up to 45 miles an hour the cold even more biting BUSES BUN LATE I Most public transportation wn SWISS BUY III! BERN tkeuter-el—'I'he courts! of States. upper of the Swiss . Tllllf day mast credit of nearly 311%.“ fffllil '37‘-' ,3) to be: II Bav- H “#- uyaadlrilarkaeaevas tgiahiaebaeace. 1621 by Sir Shovelling Storm Area back in service in Philadelphia but some buses and trolleys still were running late. In the New York metropolitan area. thousands of vehicles lay Sam up on slippery streets and high- milcs Many suburban commuters were hours getting borne. Most traffic arteries were op- ened during the day. however. have the more effective general armie- Tliursday the govcriiniciit has! .sa\‘llIt1S since the PI‘0L{I‘t‘SSl\/til t.'onsei'vativcs took office last June have bccn eaten up by pay increases g r a n t c d the armed forces. He announced no cliangei in tlic $i.722.00t).00tl dcfcticc bud-I get submitted by the Liberal gov- .ernniciit last spring. At the same time, he threw outl ta hint that dcfciice costs may gal up instead of down. Opening a‘ the Garston division of Liverpool general defence debate. he said: had a majority of 4.304 in a fight ‘. . . against Labor and Liberal oppon— if we are to continue to play aluminum sphere are solar bat- ents teries which will power the radio m The fact remains that. our; rt in the defence alliance. we P . . Al the 1955 i1¢‘n¢‘r8l 9l0<‘fl0l'I.tmust see to it that our forces arelme ”"‘l‘°l W‘” be made ‘MEY- ‘equippcd with modern wcapons..l on account of their increasing complexity. are becoming more and more costly. today it woul any other course than that we now are pursuing." Mr. Pearkes announced a reor- ganization of the army and; RCAF reserves and of the regu- lar army. l STUDY ATOM SHIPS He also said Canadian naval scientists. in conjunction with the Royal Navy. will begin next year. studies of nuclear propulsion for warships. l e announced his department will order two new destroyers. costing some $95,000,000 apiece. to bring the total program to 18 itdestroycrs. Seven have been com- missioned. . Pearkea said the use of‘ force to repel invading bombers _over Canada would be the exer- the Canadian government could commit Canada to war. i W. J. Henderson, Liberal de-.' fence critic. warned that the gov-i ernment must not become ' - volved in the "brinkmanship" of U.S. State Secretary John Foster Dulles. He said Mr. Pcarkcs and Ex-t’ ternal Affairs Minister Sidney Smith should review the Canada- U.S. agreement establishing thel ioint Air Dcfcnce Command to. !make sure that it is not so tooseliniitors and Christmas shoppers‘h8d be?" federal spending. ,it He informed the Commons that “ fence emergencies. l . Henderson said rcscrve-‘ fighter squadrons are maintained S\/Vill Try :.".::t..i" GOV'l' U n a ble To Cut 1 Liberal Defence Budget the numbers of regular RCAI-‘ in- terccptors. ' I Mr. Pearkes said army militia been unable to reduce the 1957-5811 comparatively little cost. Theyyunits will be grouped ttigctherl defence budget, one-third of all‘-litiulti be kept available in case,into sortie 45 or 50 mobile (0 ' ’ became necessary t'o expandiumns for civil defence duties. Today V To Launch Moon CAPI-I CA.‘\‘AV'l'ZRAL. l-‘la. tAPt Proniiscd favorable winds. the U.S. defence department an-~ iiouiiccd Thursday that another ef-l fort to launch the vanguard satel-l If mechanical troubles which‘ plagued the rocket crew Wednes-I ay 0 not recur. the 22000-‘ pound Vanguard will roar sky I feel that in the world as it is “am duh"? "'9 diiyllghl l‘9‘"5- ' dbefolly to follow "3rrY”‘3 tiny American’ “moon" in its nose cone. C. H. Schooley, defence de-' partment information chief. told reporters assign to the satel- lite-firing vigil he would let theml know before bedtime when thel countdown toward the zero firing.‘ hour will start. ' SHORTER COUNTDOWN This time. the count is ex- pected to be only six or seven scheduled for Wednesday's first try. It was halted frequently as technical bugs were foun ' the Vanguard's intricate mechanism and the launching effort finally inutes A strong factor in the decision I» call Wednesday's shoot was the possibility strong high-level winds might twist or topple the rocket. "The air force has forecast. favorable winds for today.“ said‘ J. Paul Walsh. deputy director of the launching project. LONG (‘ONI-‘I-2RE.\'('E ,* Thursdays press confcrciice to announcedhe new launching at- tempt followed a long conference between the rocket experts and the military chiefs of the air force missile test centre. There can be no guarantee. Walsh said. that the Vanguard will blast off today. He sat there always is a chance that this firing. now scheduled for some time after 8 am. AST. also will be scrubbcd. Frequently, the defence depart- ment has cautioned against over- optimism about the prospects that the Vanguard. when it does 1 go aloft. will be able to establish its satellite in orbit with the Rus- was abandoned 50 m be- fore zero. ‘ 92 Bodies Are Removed From ;°°i'i‘='i’°‘ii"-'i'm"v't"ui”?-'«"v'é «mm «- . horsepower to \ I.0.NDON tCPl~—Rescue teams working under the menace of teetering steel girders reported Tursday night they have taken 92 bodies from the wreckage of two smashed trains. Police said 177 persons were injured. I10 se- verely. Swirling fog—lhe choking mist in which he two southbound‘ trains collided with 2.000 com-1 sian Sputniks. WEATHER Cloudy with a few dear lntervdiz Itlh change in temperefzlroz floral WW“ 2’ dim ' lmshingin NOT MORE THAN the afternoon. FIVE CENTS Russia Launches World's First Nuclear Surface Ship OTTAWA 't'Pt—-There are in- tlicatioiis the defence department: pia . tro_vt-rs to nuclear U ycars. Dcfcnce l\lllllSlL‘l‘ Pcarkcs an- power within 1 L iiouiiccd in the Coiiimons Thurs- day that studies of nuclear pro pulsion for warships will be un- tlcrtakcii in conjunction with the U)a _' y, A t‘anadian team of scientists.‘ and nav‘al_0ffi(-ers will go to Brit—« ain next year to begin these stud- l('\ 4 l icr this year. Commodore Burchcll. deputy chief ofi technical services. ‘ the navy may to nuclear within I-Lari ll (2 naval ).£(‘.~lt‘d convert warslups cars. lie based the suggestion on the growing demands electric the next 10 power in naval vessels. He said 1 the navy is rapidly reaching the point vvlicre the law of diminish- ing returns takes over as far as the Size of generators is con- ccriicd. "The alternatives are more efficient generators. ship and-or nuclear power clear: larger Burcliell said a ship of this class in the 19605 will probably need a capacity of 2,200 kilowatts. \l()S(‘()W (AP! The $0- viet government announced world's first nuclear surface ship —he 16,000-ton iccbrealter Lenin —was launched Thursday at Len- P. ngrad. The Soviet agency Tass said in- stallation of the sill ' ‘ ahead fast but gave no date ii-'t'c7>'m‘5-'u’i’3'n"-d'5"t'5»'°iv"-='i'-yo’-="iiTrains’ ‘Wreckage In London gravely injured in the disaster.‘ n 30 bodies were drag- ged from the wreck scene at Lewisham Thursday. Meanwhile. executives of the British Rail-t ways prepared to begin a closed door investigation today into the, crash. i The tragedy was mentioned int‘ the House of Commons as Labor; member George Strauss said it. suggested the fog‘ tthat Canada might be thrust jm,o‘ab(>ard Wednesday night —- still alarm was not operating at the '“al'. t N0 CABINET Al’l‘Rll\'Al. I-I agreement, ‘announced was ever approved by the cab- inet. It appeared to have been arranged by the Canadian and. U.S. defence departments. . ‘ CCF‘ leader Coldwcll said the ‘only possible defence is the ab-l sencc of war. lnstca of .\‘j)(‘IldI|'lg‘ millions on “obsolete" weapons. Canada should use the money tot remove the threats of war by‘ helping give all parts of thet world more food and a better ,atandard of living ‘ Mr. Coldwcll said every branch inf the armed forces can be ‘,SlIOWn to be iiiadcquati-ly pre- ipared for war Solon Low, Social (‘rcdil leader, some dcfencc -bcr of scientific and technical ways. During the night one j8THlpcr§onno]_ north of New York extended Mr. Pearkes said RCAI-‘ auxil- lary fighter and light bomber ‘squadrons will gradually be con- vertcd to transport duties to aid in peacetime or wartime civil de- T|""*~""‘i. .. oio Ann NEW CHAT Ai1lairisivet‘onuei-vattve prime minister Llub. Mr. Mefghen was 'l'()RON’l'O. Rf Hon Coaurvnive at the tlltli anniversary dinner of prime inisium. mt- niatstnr nntuaiuiur. at the with Prime tin founding of the Toronto Club while Mr. Diefenbaker was Caaadraeeood eldest Caaaein cipal speaker. icr wage‘ db lilankcted the scene as darkness I tirctiicii hacked at the wreck-it Piles of (‘hristmas prcsents.l children's toys and bits of cloth-y mg were scattered along the’- tracks ‘ Police and railway officials disagreed on whether any more bodies might still be pinned in- -tde the twisted stool and spun‘ tcrcd woodwork 1 A railway 0lll(’l.ll said the? blood stained rescue teams had: completed removing bodies from’ the debris and were conccntrat-: ing on clearing the line of onel coach crushed undcr the huge: L1ll‘flt'l'S of a wrecked ovcrpassl lirtt Otlicr authorities ltislsvted more cpmdlng l)tl(ll(‘S still might be found by minister. said Thursday be abandoned. Sonic fell victim to_mu]d hen" m. dm.(.,.d u, re. lirciiicn cutting the coach apart proved the action of F.\'lcrn."t| Af- tremendous traffic jams that bui|tV5,_.a,...h and ,m.rm_\.,,,u H... ,,,m,. It had been feared many dead would be found in this pulvcrizcd car T0 MOUNT HOI'Rl.Y t The death toll was expected to mount almost hourly because of l wreck site when it should have it lbcc Transport Minister llarold Wat- Mr. ll 2 n der so it mamIaIncd.a:e by the light of flares andikinson said this matter related to‘ there is no indication that the‘ai-i- lamps for the second night.:'the public investigation to be held later. Passengers were quoted as say»; ing the usual fog watchers were‘ not stationed at regular postsl along the tracks. A rail official said. however. the emergency service was considered unneces- sary bccause a new form of sig- nailing by colored lights was in operation Martin “Bfackswi l Smith's Views ; lt‘l" llou Lilivral Paul livalllil an S.»\SK.‘\'l‘()()f\' .vlartin, former fairs Minister Sidncy Smith in criticizing US State Sccrctary .lolin l-‘ostcr Dulles reluctance to‘ negotiate with the Soviet L‘nton.f Mr. Martin told a press confer- ence here he agreed with .\lr. Smiths concern ovcr l)tlll(‘s' fail- tm. large number of pm-sonsture to negotiate “in the light of — - —~——-— - ~—-— ‘no w world changes " Martin said ('anatiian.s‘ would be foohlardy in this ' awful period" not to make every effort to come to some understanding with the Soviet The lIf‘l1(‘S call for an intelligent and responsible approach. he ca‘ « and if it did not come soon. “the; West would be placed in a diffi- cult situation " {nit Baffled” : By Earthquake ‘ LONDON tflcutersl — Seismol- ogists were still baffled Thursday on the location of what they rec- orded early Wednesday as one of the biggest earthquakes in years. tremor. equal in intensity to the I906 San Francisco earth- quake, now is thought taken place somewhere tral Asia. t Indian and Chinese ohserva-‘ tories said the epicentre of the ‘ ' ‘ in Mongolia in (‘CIT honored dress-up birthday party ‘ was . while the Helsinki seismolngical station said it was In the north- ern Himalayas or in Turkestan. RIG LIGHT -southern part of the island while to have V gines with 44,000 jproduce steam for turbo-genera- [tors which produce power for the ipropellers. Present at the launching were the ship's future captain. Arctic expert P. A. Ponomarev. and chief engineer K. K. Dolgopolov. Tass gave these technical de- tails on the ship: Acconimodatcs 1.000 men: top spootl 19 knots; draft 30 feet; Edge Of Severe Atlantic Storm Brushes }l\l,ll"\.\l WP!--(Sale - blown <nti\\' slowed highway and air traf tic 'l‘ltursday on the eastern Nova Scotia mainland and Cape Breton Island. The snowfall measured on] four inches but it drifted before the high wind. .\cwfoiindlandcrs also felt the ast Snow and rain pcltcd the the north got snow. Traffic was slowed and some schools were closed Western Nova Scotia. New lil'llll\‘\Al('l( and Prince Edward l-lantl escaped the snow. The sun ioiic in .\t-w Brunswick - gale I0ll(‘lllllL’ 50 miles an litiur in gusts drifted highways in (‘ape Hrcttin island and the east- crn .\tiva St-otia mainland. The pro\incial l'llL'llWi'l_V.S department warncd motorists to stay home. The Halifax weather office said there were actually three storms. One was centred 400 miles south of Yarmouth. NS. another 150 miles south of Sable Island. and the third 130 miles south of New- loundland Gagetown Ecimp “V—Vill¢B"e_ S length 433': feet; maximum The designers say the ship will be able to operate a year without refuelling and break through ice up to six feet tilll('l(. It is expected to be of spe- ‘cial value in Arctic exploration -and in clearing ice for merchant vessels on the northern sea routes above Siberia. For comparison. Jane's Fight- ing Ships gives these details on the US. Navy icebreaker Glac- ier. commissioned in May 1955. which the 195667 edition of the ritish manual describes as “ largest and highesttpowered ice- breaker yet built." The Glacier displaces 5,100 tons light and 8.775 fully loaded. It is powered by two 10.500 horse- power electric motors. Speed in 6 knots maximum. It is 310 feet long. 74 feet in the beam. has a draft of 29 feet and is said to be able to smash ice up to 20 feet, thick with a reinforced bow capable of ramming through in- n top of the ice and smashing from ve The new St. Laurent class des- troyer has total generating ‘ Capacity of 1400 kilowatts ._ The first nuclear-powered sub enough to service a city of about 7800 Ship. the 21.000-Ion me!‘ 10.000 populati0n—but Commdore chantman Savannah. is sched- uled for completion in 1960. Tho U.S. Navy has been operating atomic ~ powered submarines for several years. May Assist in Trap Loss Area OTTAWA (CP)—-Fisheries Min- ister MacLean ur indi- cated the poesibllity of federal ae- eistiance to Nova Sootia lobetc ‘I’. . M. Kirk (L — Shelburr Yarmouth-Clare) said in the Co mons that the damage was suf fered by fishermen in southwe Nova Scotia. He naked whetihe the government was taking any specific action to assist the fish- errnen. The matter is under considera tion in the department. Mr. Ma Lean said. Eastern N.S. The storm off Yarmouth wal the one that dumped heavy snow on the eastern United States Wednesday. DELAYS FIVE SHIPS Five ships bo d for Halifax were held up. one of them the liner Scynthia with 700 Canadian S()ldlf‘I‘S and dependents return- ing from Europe. The Scyntia now is expected today. The German freighter Skau- vann loaded with pipe for the Trans-Canada ’ entered port during the gale but delayed berthing until today The edge of the storm brushed Halifax Heavy snow fcll at the mouth of Halifax harbor but practically none on the Clly. The salvage tug Foundation Jo- sephine. bound for Halifax with the L396-ton Panamanian freigh- ter Marisco in tow, sought shelter in Port Hawkesbury. .\'S._ from heavy seas. ‘, The .\larisco called for assist ance earlier in when she lost her rudder in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. She will undergo repairs here. Eastern Anchor Of The Army OTTAWA tCPi ,. The army's sprawling (‘amp Gagetown. N.B.. will become the eastern anchor of the nation's ground forces sys- tem under plans disclosed Thurs- day in the (‘ommons by Defence mister Pcarkes Mr Pearkes told the House that headquarters of the lst (‘a- nadian Infantry Division at Camp town. (‘amp Wainwright. Alta.. and either Petawawa or Camp Bo Ont One battalion of each brigade will have a parachute orce. Army officers said this will. in effect. retain the three-battalion mobile striking force. . Defence Minister Pearkea said Under favorable conditions the beam from Cape Rae: liglittioiise in Newfoundland can be seen 70 away. later the defence department still jplaas to nation an infantry gade group at Gagetown. A bri- gade group comprises some 6.000 en The minister was replying to A. Wesley Stuart -L -- (Jharlottct. who said New Brunswick is pro testing the closing of Camp Uto- pia. N B. and curtailment of ac- tivity at (iagctown IS "GREAT SHOCK" 3 Efipiveigwa. 0nt.. will be dia- Mr Sum" “id me” ‘were ..I Th ,1 great shock to us all.‘ Utopia ° ." m ' "my Wm be provided employment for 70 to 90 grouped into three independent mvmm d G M infantry brigade groups. with V. S ‘n "9 W" ‘"5 ‘° 5"“ Land _ “mum ‘M provide an annual payroll of SIS.- iebcc-Maritimes as the g “mom raphtcal districts Purl": "M “X” "'9' men will train at (;iige- M um" '' ("3°‘°"“ ""5 Wm‘ mer instead of l0.m0 as in the last three years. But thia had “flown 8 fast as accornmodetlea— Mainly married quarters-—eonld be pre vtded. The department was deferme- llllt whether aome otbd I - eouldbeaiadeallltqts